Connect to Kubernetes Dashboard

- [Instructor] Earlier in this chapter,…when we created the CLI container, we exposed…port 8,001 to our container.…We are going to take advantage of that now…to access our Kubernetes Dashboard from our computer.…To allow us to access the dashboard,…we create a proxy by using this command.…Once the proxy is created, we can access the UI…by going to local host port 8,001/UI.…

Now that we are in the dashboard,…we can view our nodes, which is our computers…that we are running on, our agent,…and our master.…We can view our deployments.…Here is the deployment that we created earlier…and we can view our pods, which are all…the instances of our application that are running.…And in this case you can see that we are only running one.…Now lets scale our deployment to more pods.…We need to go up to the deployments area…and over at the right, under these three dots,…we'll click on this, and we'll say view…our YAML file.…

Now this will look familiar.…This is the file we used to create our deployment…and we are going to scroll down…

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Author

Released

8/21/2017

Containers are the future of app development. Microsoft has developers covered. Learn how to use Docker and the powerful features in Visual Studio, Visual Studio Team Services, and Azure to build container-based .NET applications. Instructor Floyd Hilton starts by showing you how to set up your environment, incorporate Docker into Windows development and DevOps life cycles, and debug applications in Visual Studio Code and Visual Studio 2017. Then he describes how to build a continuous delivery pipeline by using Team Services to pull code from Git, creating container images, pushing to Azure, and deploying containers to Linux app services. Curious about your hosting options in Azure? Floyd reviews your choices, including Azure App Service, Azure Container Service, and Azure Service Fabric. Plus, learn how to use Azure container services to create Kubernetes clusters that can host .NET applications.